Total Resource Cost (TRC) Test and Avoided Costs

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Total Resource Cost (TRC) Test and Avoided Costs

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Title: Total Resource Cost (TRC) Test and Avoided Costs


1
Total Resource Cost (TRC) Test and Avoided Costs
  • Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Workshop
  • Wednesday, August 5, 20091000 a.m. 300 p.m.
  • Presentations by Snuller Price and Richard Sedano
  • Representing
  • Electricity Markets and Policy Group
  • Environmental Energy Technologies Division
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL)

2
Agenda
  • Presentations 1000 a.m. 1200 p.m.
  • Introduction of presenters Snuller Price and
    Richard Sedano
  • Cost-effectiveness Nuts and Bolts
  • What Other States Do and Examples
  • Key Drivers to the C/E Results
  • Break 1200 p.m. 100 p.m.
  • Presentations 100 p.m. 200 p.m.
  • 5. Developing Avoided Costs in Restructured
    Markets
  • 6. Specific Considerations in Ohio
  • Discussion of TRC Issues 200 p.m. 300pm

3
Workshop Objectives
  • Provide Stakeholders a common understanding of
    Total Resource Cost (TRC) test-related issues and
    to facilitate discussion
  • Provide a forum for discussion of TRC-related
    issues as they relate to the development of a
    statewide technical reference manual
  • Provide forum for discussion of TRC and
    cost-effectiveness issues.

4
Introduction LBNL Technical Assistance to States
on Energy Efficiency
  • LBNL (and team of consultants) funded by DOE EERE
    and OE
  • Working with 9 states (mainly PUCs, but also
    Energy Offices) Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois,
    Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Wyoming
    and Kentucky
  • Scope of activities varies by state depending on
    their priorities needs
  • Workshops on decoupling, shareholder incentives
    and cost recovery (Kansas)
  • Workshop on Benefit/Cost analysis (Kansas) EMV
    issues (IL), Alternative models for EE
    Administration (Hawaii)
  • Technical assistance on Solicitations for Program
    Administrators (Hawaii) help negotiate Contract
    and Performance Incentives for 3rd Party
    administrator
  • Assistance on solicitations for statewide EMV
    contractors (MD, PA, OH)
  • Input on EE Program plan filing template (PA and
    Ohio)
  • Strategies to oversee and manage Evaluation,
    Measurement Verification (EMV) planning and
    studies (MA, OH, PA, MD)
  • Assistance on Benefit/Cost analysis methods (PA)

5
Contact Information
  • Snuller Price
  • Energy and Environmental Economics, Inc. (E3)
  • Email snuller_at_ethree.com
  • Phone 415-391-5100
  • Richard Sedano
  • Regulatory Assistance Project (RAP)
  • Email rsedano_at_raponline.org
  • Phone 802-223-8199
  • Original material from the National Action Plan
    for Energy Efficiency
  • Public-private initiative supported by the U.S.
    EPA and DOE
  • Copies of Understanding Cost-Effectiveness of
    Energy Efficiency Programs Best Practices,
    Technical Methods, and Emerging Issues for
    Policy-Makers available

www.epa.gov/eeactionplan
6
Agenda
  • Walk-through of Key Cost-effectiveness Issues
  • Reviews the issues and approaches for
    policy-makers to consider when adopting EE
    cost-effectiveness tests
  • Discussion of the perspective represented by
    each of the five standard cost-effectiveness
    tests
  • Defining and clarifying key terms and issues
  • Original material from the National Action Plan
    for Energy Efficiency
  • Understanding Cost-Effectiveness of Energy
    Efficiency Programs
  • Best Practices, Technical Methods, and
    Emerging Issues for
  • Policy-Makers

7
2. Cost-Effectiveness Nuts and Bolts
8
Key Cost-effectiveness Issues
Section
  • Definition of cost-effectiveness tests 2
  • Cost-effectiveness tests to use 2 3
  • Point of cost-effectiveness measurement 4
  • Discount rate 4
  • Net to gross ratio and free-riders 4
  • Emissions savings and RPS impact 4
  • Non-energy benefits 4
  • Calculation of avoided costs 5

9
Origins of Cost-effectiveness Traditional Supply
Side Planning
  • Cost-effectiveness analysis is rooted in least
    cost utility supply planning where objective is
    to
  • develop the least cost supply portfolio that
  • has acceptable level of cost risk,
  • meets established reliability criteria, and
  • complies with environmental regulations.
  • Traditional analysis yields a preferred supply
    plan
  • Integrated supply and demand planning (IRP) can
    also yield a preferred supply plan
  • No benefits calculation is needed in this
    framework, just a complete characterization of
    all costs required to meet the object function

10
Why cost-effectiveness analysis?
  • Shortcomings of full IRP approach
  • Complex analysis on broad set of issues from fuel
    supply, operability, supply technology
  • Significant time required (2 years typically)
  • Lack of stakeholder transparency
  • Focus on ratepayer cost and risk, subject to
    minimum standards on reliability, environment
  • Once you have your preferred plan

How do you test for a lower cost solution?
11
Cost-effectiveness Framework
  • Testing whether an alternative plan is lower cost
    is the basic building block of CE analysis
  • Evaluate the costs of EE program
  • Evaluate the change in costs of your preferred
    supply plan (avoided costs)
  • These are the benefits of implementing your
    program
  • Compute the difference (or ratio)

Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
More formally, net present value difference of
benefits and costs
12
Definition of Cost Tests
Cost Test Acronym Key Question Answered Summary Approach
Participant Cost Test PCT Will the participants benefit over the measure life? Comparison of costs and benefits of the customer installing the measure
Utility/Program Administrator Cost Test UCT/PAC Will utility bills increase? Comparison of program administrator costs to supply side resource costs
Ratepayer Impact Measure RIM Will utility rates increase? Comparison of administrator costs and utility bill reductions to supply side resource costs
Total Resource Cost TRC Will the total costs of energy in the utility service territory decrease? Comparison of program administrator and customer costs to utility resource savings
Societal Cost Test SCT Is the utility, state, or nation better off as a whole? Comparison of societys costs of energy efficiency to resource savings and non-cash costs and benefits
13
Summary of Costs and Benefits
  • High level summary of costs and benefits
    included in each cost test
  • Each state adjusts these definitions depending
    on circumstances
  • Details can significantly affect the type of
    energy efficiency implemented

Component PCT PAC RIM TRC SCT
Energy and capacity related avoided costs. - Benefit Benefit Benefit Benefit
Additional resource savings - - - Benefit Benefit
Non-monetized benefits - - - Benefit
Incremental equipment and install costs Cost - - Cost Cost
Program overhead costs - Cost Cost Cost Cost
Incentive payments Benefit Cost Cost - -
Bill Savings Benefit Cost - -
14
TRC Test Implications
  • TRC Test measures overall cost-effectiveness
  • Pop Quiz
  • Does the size of the incentives change the TRC?
  • Do the customer bill savings change the TRC?
  • Think control volume around Ohio, is more or
    less money flowing into Ohio for energy?
  • Distribution Tests (RIM, PCT, UCT)
  • If the TRC is positive, what can we say about the
    distribution of costs and benefits?
  • Need distributional tests
  • PCT (cost-effectiveness for participants)
  • UCT / PAC (cost-effectiveness from a utility
    perspective)
  • RIM (economics for non-participants)

15
3. What Other States Do and Examples
16
Cost Tests by State
Primary Cost Test Used by Different States Primary Cost Test Used by Different States Primary Cost Test Used by Different States Primary Cost Test Used by Different States Primary Cost Test Used by Different States Primary Cost Test Used by Different States
PCT UCT/PAC RIM TRC SCT Unspecified
CT, DC, TX FL CA, CO, DE, IL, MA, MO, NH, NJ, NM, RI, UT AZ, ME, MN, VT, WI AR, CO, DE, GA, HI, IA, ID, IN, KS, KY, MD, MT, NC, ND,, NV, OK, OR, PA, SC, VA, WA, WY
Secondary Cost Test Used by Different States Secondary Cost Test Used by Different States Secondary Cost Test Used by Different States Secondary Cost Test Used by Different States Secondary Cost Test Used by Different States
PCT UCT/PAC RIM TRC SCT
AR, FL, GA, HI, IA, IN, MN, VA AT, CA, CT, HI, IA, IN, MN, MO, NV, NY, OR, UT, VA, TX AR, DC, FL, GA, HI, IA, IN, KS, MN, NH, VA AR, CA, CT, FL, GA, HI, IL, IN, KS, MA, ME, MN, MO, MT, NH, NM, NY, UT, VA AZ, CO, GA, HI, IA, IN, MW, MN, MT, NV, OR, VA, VT, WI
17
TRC Variations
  • Illinois Gas savings excluded
  • Rhode Island Default test looks only at electric
    savings, but alternative is allowed actual test
    used includes natural gas and water savings
  • New York Includes effect on energy market prices
    (called total market test)
  • Colorado must include non-energy benefits, by law

18
Example Cost Test Results
  • Benefit / Cost ratio results from three programs
  • Energy efficiency is widely cost-effective
  • RIM test results are often less than one

Test So. Cal. Edison Residential Program AVISTA Regular Income Puget Sound Energy Com/Ind Retrofit
PCT 7.14 3.47 1.72
PAC 9.91 4.18 4.19
RIM 0.63 0.85 1.15
TRC 4.21 2.26 1.90
SCT 4.21 2.26 1.90
19
4. Key Drivers to the C/E Results
20
Point of Cost-Effectiveness Measurement
  • Application at portfolio level allows for
    inclusion of individual programs or measures that
    do not past cost test
  • Low Income, emerging technologies, market
    transformation

21
Time specific avoided costs
Example from California Avoided Cost Analysis
22
Discount Rates are a key input
Tests and Perspective Discount Rate Used Illustrative Value Present Value of 1/yr for 20 years Todays value of the 1 received in Year 20
Participant Cost Test (PCT)) Participants discount rate 10 8.51 0.15
Ratepayer Impact Measure (RIM) Utility WACC 8.5 9.46 0.20
Utility Cost Test (UCT/PAC) Utility WACC 8.5 9.46 0.20
Total Resources Cost Test (TRC) Utility WACC 8.5 9.46 0.20
Societal Cost Test Social discount rate 5 12.46 0.38
23
RIM Test and Impact on Non-participants over Time
  • RIM Test fails to capture the change in rates
    over time which can vary and are difficult to
    asses in an NPV type approach

Action Plan and LBNL have developed the EE
Benefits Calculator which can estimate the rate
trajectory over time
24
Net To Gross (NTG) Ratio
  • Net to gross ratio may derate the program impacts
    and significantly affects the results of the TRC,
    SCT, PAC, and RIM tests
  • Difficult to estimate the NTG with confidence
  • Key factors addressed through the net-to-gross
    ratio are
  • Free Riders
  • Installation Rate
  • Persistence/Failure
  • Rebound Effect
  • Take Back Effect
  • Spillover

25
Incentives
  • With an energy efficiency resource standard,
    program administrators must produce savings
  • So is there a place for incentives?
  • If there are public interest goals beyond the
    EERS, there could be.
  • What if small commercial customers are harder to
    work with to sell energy efficiency?
  • Temptation to market to population segments with
    less challenge, more yield
  • Do small commercial customers lose out?

26
Sub-class incentives can promote the public
interest
  • There could be several instances where the public
    interest is served by assuring success with
    energy efficiency with particular customer
    segments
  • Schools, public buildings, low income
    residential, small stores
  • Or with particular programs
  • Energy Star appliance or equipment penetration
  • Incentives to achieve stretch goals can promote
    the public interest

27
GHG Emissions Savings from EE
  • Carbon savings profile can vary significantly

28
Value of Carbon Adder
  • Simple Calculation of Value
  • At 30/tonne CO2, natural gas combined
    cycle costs increase about 0.012/kWh and coal
    0.027/kWh

29
Including RPS in Avoided Cost
California Example Assuming a 20 RPS Target
20 RPS by 2020 (1/yr reduction in demand)
20 RPS by 2020 (Business-as-usual scenario)
  • Reducing demand 1/yr saves 9 TWh of RPS
    generation _at_ 0.123/kWh
  • Results in 8.03/MWh higher avoided cost if
    included
  • Change in avoided cost (124/MWh - 82.75/MWh)
    20

30
Accounting for Non Energy Benefits
  • Customer perspective
  • Increased comfort, quality of life
  • Improved air quality
  • Greater convenience, quality of product
  • Utility perspective
  • Reduced shut-off notices
  • Reduced bill complaints
  • Societal Perspective
  • Increased community health
  • Improved aesthetics.
  • Reduces reliance on imported energy sources

31
5. Developing Avoided Costs in Restructured
Markets
32
Electric Avoided Cost Components
  • Range of avoided cost components that are
    considered in developing the benefits for EE
  • Each state selects their own elements and methods
    for quantification

Electricity Energy Efficiency Electricity Energy Efficiency
Energy Savings Capacity Savings
Market purchases or fuel and OM costs Capacity purchases or generator construction
System Losses System losses (Peak load)
Ancillary services related to energy Transmission facilities
Energy market price reductions Distribution facilities
Co-benefits of water, natural gas, fuel oil savings (if applicable) Ancillary services related to capacity
Air emissions Capacity market price reductions
Hedging costs Land use
33
Methodology of Avoided Costs
  • Methodology depends on market structure
  • Lots of variation across states

Approaches to Value Energy and Capacity Approaches to Value Energy and Capacity Approaches to Value Energy and Capacity
Near Term (Market data is available) Long Term (No market data available)
Distribution electric or natural gas utility Current forward market prices of energy and capacity Long-term forecast of market prices of energy and capacity
Electric vertically-integrated utility Current forward market prices of energy and capacity or Expected production cost of electricity and value of deferring generation projects Long-term forecast of market prices of energy and capacity or Expected production cost of electricity and value of deferring generation projects
34
Generation Marginal Cost Forecast
Resource Balance Year
Trend to All-in Cost of New CCGT Or other
suitable proxy powerplant
Use Market and/or Market Forecast
Market Price (Energy Capacity)
Forecast of Long Run Market Price (Energy and
Capacity)
Electric Forward data
Gas Futures data
Long run forecast of market prices
2009
2013
2021
2028 and beyond
35
Market Data Available
Hourly Day-ahead Market Prices MISO and PJM
Long-term Forward Curve
36
Natural Gas Price Data
  • Natural Gas Combined Cycle powerplan most common
    long-run proxy
  • Varying degrees of linkage to utility-specific
    resource plans or market data
  • For Natural Gas Combined Cycle, gas price sum of
  • Henry Hub Futures
  • Basis Differential to nearest gas market hub
  • Delivery cost to electric generation customers

from nymex.com 8/3/2009
37
Available Forecasts
  • Publicly Available Forecasts
  • Department of Energy EIA
  • Annual Energy Outlook has most comprehensive set
    of long-run forecasts by region for the US
  • State Energy Offices
  • May produce a forecast of natural gas prices
    based on specific local market, storage, and
    supply
  • Non-public Forecasts
  • Each utility with market operations typically
    would maintain a proprietary forward curve

38
Generation Capacity Value
  • Near term, use capacity market prices
  • PJM has established market, MISO developing
  • Long term, use established CONE methodology
  • Net Capacity Value Cost of New Entrant Margin

PJM 2012-2013 Net Cone Calculation see
http//www.pjm.com/markets-and-operations/rpm//me
dia/markets-ops/rpm/rpm-auction-info/2012-2013-net
-cone-calculation.ashx
39
Hourly Costs Already Reflect Market Prices for
Various Generator Types
  • Generators that operate few hours (like peakers)
    will have relatively high average market prices.
  • Baseload plants will have relatively low average
    market prices, as they will be operating when
    marginal costs are lowest,.

Peaker Average
Baseload Average
40
TD Capacity Value
Example of Forward-looking TD Value
  • Forward Estimate of Marginal Avoided Cost
  • Based on TD Capital Expansion Plan
  • Can capture the block nature of major new
    transmission projects
  • Proxy from Transmission and Distribution Tariff
  • Based on historical data, averages costs that may
    not be avoidable

41
Allocation of Capacity Costs to Hours or Time
Periods
  • Generation
  • Simple
  • assign to peak load period summer peak
  • More Complex
  • Assign to top X hours (100 or 200) in inverse
    proportion to system reserve margin
  • Simulate
  • Use relative Loss of Load Probabilities by hour
    not readily available
  • Transmission and Distribution
  • Simple
  • Assign to peak load period summer peak
  • More Complex
  • Use Peak Capacity Allocation Factor method
    similar to reserve margin concept
  • Engineering Assessment
  • Engineering group identifies necessary loads by
    hours to reduce peak, allocates costs

42
TD Allocation with PCAFs
  • Approach to develop hourly allocations of
    capacity value
  • Based on hourly load data
  • Approach
  • Set threshold that engineers worry stress the
    system
  • Allocate hours as the load over threshold divided
    by total at risk energy
  • Can be summarized into time periods after
    completion

43
CO2 Prices and Emissions Rates
Example meta-analysis of CO2 prices
  • Two parts to the equation
  • Marginal emissions rate depends on generation
    type and heat rate
  • Value of reduced CO2 emissions depends on
    expectations of future market for CO2, and
    forecast
  • Variation state to state on whether CO2 is an
    externality or should be included in the TRC

44
Energy Losses
Example of Losses as Function of Load
  • Losses should be applied for both energy and
    capacity savings
  • Average losses are typically used in ratemaking
    for recovery of losses
  • Marginal losses measure the change in losses due
    to change in load
  • Approximately 2x average losses
  • Average Marginal losses are typical the
    average of the marginal loss savings over a
    period of time

Marginal Losses 15
Average Losses 8
45
6. Specific Considerations in Ohio
46
Transparency
47
Cost-Effectiveness Has Many Details
  • How to keep them straight?
  • How to factor in public interest considerations?
  • How to resolve disagreements?
  • How to account for inevitable changes?
  • How to maintain confidence?

48
  • Stated method approved by a commission to
    calculate avoided cost
  • Guidance on energy savings from electric
    substitutes (natural gas, fuel, oil propane,
    etc.)
  • Directions on using discount rate
  • TRC thresholds, especially if lt 1
  • DC allows certain programs at 0.8
  • What does not count in calculations but gets
    reported and may influence decisions
  • Collaborative or other process to discuss
    anomalies and new information

49
The Distinct Perspectives Regarding Energy
Efficiency of Industrial Customers and Ratepayers
50
Industrial Customer Perspective
  • Industrial customers need to be competitive
  • Energy efficiency helps industrial customers be
    more competitive by lowering production costs and
    also by inspiring process improvements that can
    raise quality
  • Energy efficiency projects compete with other
    projects for limited capital
  • Winning projects often have payback periods of 24
    or even 18 months
  • These are projects a motivated industrial
    customer will do and define as all
    cost-effective

51
Ratepayer Perspective
  • Ratepayers have a different perspective
  • Ratepayers want to avoid more expensive new
    resources
  • Total Resource Cost reveals programs that are
    cost-effective for ratepayers and for society
  • Programs and measures with participant paybacks
    of 5, or even 7 years without incentives
    (incentives create acceptable payback) will
    screen
  • Industrial customers will not do these on their
    own, but they will if given an offer as part of
    an energy efficiency program

52
  • In that event, the participant wins
  • Gets a capital infusion for plant or process
    improvement that now meets internal budget screen
  • Lowers operating costs and improves quality
  • And the ratepayer wins
  • Gets more cost-effective energy efficiency
    deployed to avoid more expensive choices
  • Promoting industrial customer participation in
    energy efficiency programs is in the public
    interest

53
Evaluation ofMarket Transformation Programs
54
Savings and Transformation
  • Different categories of programs
  • Savings get savings now, count them now
  • Opportunities
  • Create opportunities
  • Transformation get savings later
  • Create awareness, knowledge, training
  • Create, strengthen supply chains, support

55
Overseeing Market Transformation
  • If Market Transformation is useful
  • How to screen in the B/C test process?
  • How to make savings count in EERS?

56
Market Transformation Puzzler
  • The case of Business As Usual lagging Building
    Energy Codes
  • What happens if standard construction practices
    do not produce code-compliant buildings?
  • Survey would reveal current status
  • Programs could assume code-compliance and just
    offer opportunities to be more efficient (and
    just count those incremental savings
  • Has this approach addressed barriers to energy
    efficiency effectively?

57
Code Remediation
  • A market transformation program could be a plan
    to address lagging building design and
    construction performance
  • Noting that code enforcement is generally lax or
    even absent
  • Program could focus on training of architects,
    engineers, builders, suppliers and customers and
    be time-limited to bring a very high percentage
    of new construction (what about existing
    buildings?) up to code within that time

58
Screening MT Programs
  • One approach
  • Decide on a plan for market transformation it
    looks like a business plan, and should address
    clearly described barriers to energy efficiency
  • Do not bother to screen the MT programs
  • Screen the portfolio including all costs with no
    savings

59
Screening MT Programs
  • Another approach
  • Decide on a plan for market transformation
  • Forecast savings from MT based on marketing
    studies and other data
  • Screen the MT programs
  • Screen the portfolio including all costs and
    forecasted savings
  • Consider including forecasted savings in EERS
    when programs are evaluated (evaluation of MT is
    about process, not counting current savings)

60
Exceptions
  • For some Market Transformation programs, counting
    savings can be rather straight-forward
  • Energy Star appliances (i.e. clothes washers)
  • Distributed over a population of customers
  • Penetration is measured in market areas (states
    yes, utilities?)
  • Delta penetration equals savings, but must avoid
    double counting with spillover from targeted
    programs (program goal increase penetration of
    new Energy Star clothes washers from 20 to 30)
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